Vm. Kaya et al., A COMPARATIVE-STUDY OF 4 SYSTEMS FOR TERTIARY WASTE-WATER TREATMENT BY SCENEDESMUS-BICELLULARIS - NEW TECHNOLOGY FOR IMMOBILIZATION, Journal of applied phycology, 7(1), 1995, pp. 85-95
Immobilization appears to be one of the best techniques to separate ph
ysically micro-algal cells from their culture medium for the purpose o
f algal tertiary wastewater treatment. High operation costs and other
drawbacks of large-scale physico-chemical methods of harvest led to a
comparative study of biotreatment systems. Before treatment began, Sce
nedesmus bicellularis cells were conditioned (starved) under four diff
erent sets of conditions: 1) non-immobilized cells with air bubbling (
NCA); 2) cells immobilized in alginate beads (CBW) and 3) cells immobi
lized on alginate screens (CSW), all conditioned in synthetic culture
medium depleted in N and P; 4) cells immobilized on alginate screens b
ut conditioned in air at 100% relative humidity (CSA). Starvation was
started under a light:dark photoperiod of 16:8 h. Starved cells were t
hen used to treat wastewater for a 2-h period. The performance of each
system was evaluated by determination of residual NH4-N and phosphate
ions and by growth (dry weight, total chlorophyll, cell count, protei
n content). We then tested the capacity of microalgae immobilized on s
creens to eliminate N and P from a secondary municipal wastewater effl
uent and examined the influence of temperature and starvation. The qua
lity of treated effluents was improved considerably with the system us
ing CSA or CSW model. For CSA model, the protein content was 22.4 pg c
ell-1 compared to 12.9, 9.5, 9.1 pg cell-1 for NCA, CBW and CSW models
, respectively. The CBW and CSW models were efficient for chlorophyll
synthesis. The residual ammonium content in natural wastewater after 2
h of treatment with CSA model was 39% at 6+/-2-degrees-C and reached
100% removal at 18+/-2-degrees-C. With the first 2 h, the removal of o
rthophosphate was inferior (53%) at 6+/-2-degrees-C, but 88 to 100% at
18+/-2-degrees-C depending on starvation times. Long starvation times
(72 or 96 h) caused damage to cells and uptake of nutrients was lower
than with 54 h starvation. This work demonstrates that by using immob
ilization on screens, removal of nutrients from wastewater was higher
than with conventional biological tertiary wastewater treatments (free
cells or bead-shaped alginate particles).